Vertebral artery dissection is one of the more frequent cerebral-vascular disorders in the young adult. The initial symptoms rarely consist of vertigo with clinical characteristics of Selective Monolateral Acute Vestibular Deficit Syndrome. The case is described of a patient, who arrived with intense rotatory vertigo associated with neurovegetative symptoms and spontaneous nystagmus, which we initially diagnosed as right neuronitis. About 48 hours later, the symptoms of vertigo disappeared spontaneously, and prevalently nuchal cephalea appeared. Since the symptoms were atypical and the otoneurologic study revealed normal canalar and otholithic function, a cerebral nuclear magnetic resonance, with contrast, was carried out which showed the presence of multiple areas of cerebellar ischaemia, prevalently on the left, and at the level of the right occipital lobe. Study of the patient was completed with an intracranial angio-nuclear magnetic resonance of the neck arteries and cerebral angiography the findings of which were compatible with left vertebral artery dissection. It is important to emphasize, as reported in the literature, that in cases in which atypical evolution of the pathology appears, or instrumental data do not confirm initial suspicions, a more scrupulous study is always necessary in order to find a possible central cause. Among the central causes, it should not be forgotten that multiple small cerebellar strokes (more frequent in elderly patients) and even more rarely also vertebral artery dissection (which is typical of younger patients) may become evident in a clinical picture that is almost identical to that seen in selective monolateral acute vestibular deficit syndrome.
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